Last year we put together our 'delicious list' of books of the year (including Christmas gift lists) from a myriad of different publications and websites and it was very popular. So here we go again. This post will be regularly updated over the next month, as more lists come out.
- The Daily Telegraph : Books of the Year from authors such as Andrew Motion (poet Alice Oswald's Memorial, her take on the Iliad) and Ali Smith (Down the Rabbit Hole by the Mexican writer Juan Pablo Villalobos) with Part II here; also, Biographies rounded up by Nicholas Shakespeare (including Ann Wroe's "lovely and original" book on Orpheus and Gordon Bowker's biography of James Joyce), Fiction (Julian Barnes's Booker-winner The Sense of an Ending, Cedilla by Adam Mars-Jones). Another Books of the Year from reviewers.
- The Scotsman: Books of the Year from Scots contributors, including Sally Magnusson (Claire Tomalin's new biography of Dickens).
- The Irish Times : Favourite Books of 2011 from many, including Belinda McKeon (Richard Beard's Lazarus is Dead), Stuart Neville (Declan Burke's Absolute Zero Cool), and Patrick Ness (yet another vote for Ali Smith's There But For The). Eileen Battersby's Books of the Year starts with Hisham Matar's The Anatomy of a Disappearance.
- The New Statesman : a long list of contributors, including John Lanchester (Nicola Shulman's Graven with Diamonds: the many lives of Thomas Wyatt, courtier, poet, assassin, spy) and Julie Myerson (Jeanette Winterston's Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?).
- The New York Times : 100 Notable Books of 2011, including The Keats Brothers by Denise Gigante, and 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami, as well as the 10 Best Books of 2011 (including Téa Obreht's The Tiger's Wife) and Michiko Kakutani's Picks for 2011 (Obreht again, and Don DeLillo's short story collection The Angel Esmerelda). Editors and critics pick their books of the year as well, including Executive Editor Jill Abramson who chose Edmund de Waal's The Hare with the Amber Eyes (now available in a new illustrated edition).
- Marginal Revolution: Tyler Cowan's lists include Best non-fiction (including John Sutherland's The Lives of the Novelists) Best Fiction (Audur Ava Olafsdottir's The Greenhouse) [via @iamreddave]
- The Atlantic: 5 Books of the Year (including Philip Larkin's Letters to Monica), and Runners-up (including David Lodge's novel about H.G. Wells, A Man of Parts).
- The Guardian: Books of the Year from many, including Chimamanda Adichie (Sebastian Barry's On Canaan's Side), Julia Donaldson (Patrick Ness and Siobhan Dowd's A Monster Calls) and Helen Dunmore (Sean O'Brien's new collection of poems November). The newspaper's Best Books of 2011 articles include poetry, fiction, economics and children's books. And here is Nicholas Lezard's Pick of Paperbacks in 2011, starting with Diego Marani's New Finnish Grammar. Also, Guardian readers choose their favourites.
- The Sunday Times (no link - subscription needed): Part I in the Culture section included Fiction from Peter Kemp and Eithne Shorthall (including Edward Aubyn's conclusion to the brilliant Melrose series, At Last, Kevin Barry's City of Bohane and Jonathan Buckley's intriguing Telescope), History from Dominic Sandbrook, Memoirs from Robert Collins, Poetry from Alan Brownjohn (Michael Longley's A Hundred Doors) and much more. In Crime Fiction, Declan Burke's Absolute Zero Cool, 'among the most memorable books of the year, of any genre... evokes the best of Flann O'Brien and Bret Easton Ellis'). David Maybury on his blog links to Amanda Craig's selection of children's books of 2011, her 13+ novel of the year being Moira Young’s Blood Red Road, "an exuberant thriller set in a post-apocalyptic landscape."
- The Observer: Books as Christmas gifts - which would you give, which would you like to get? - from Diana Athill (Claire Tomalin's Charles Dickens: a life), Julie Myerson (Jacqueline Yallop's novel Obedience) and many more. And also sub-sections, such as Thrillers (including two novels about memory loss, S.J. Watson's Before I Go to Sleep and Alice LaPlante's Turn of Mind).
- Amazon.co.uk: Best Books of 2011 starts with Elizabeth Haynes's debut thriller, Into the Darkest Corner, a real page-turner, and includes Jennifer Egan's widely-praised A Visit from the Goon Squad. Click further for the rest of 50 choices, including at no. 19 The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides.
- Susan Thomsen at Chicken Spaghetti has a tremendous round-up of children's literature lists of 2011.
- The Globe and Mail (Canada): The Globe 100: the very best books of 2011, including Elizabeth Hay's novel Alone in the Classroom, Colm Tóibín's short story collection The Empty Family and Anne Enright's The Forgotten Waltz.
- NPR Radio: Five 2011 That Stay With You by Heller McAlpin includes the ubiquitous Booker Prize winner, The Sense of an Ending by Julian Barnes, and Joan Didion's Blue Nights. Also independent booksellers from around America have their own choice - Unpacking My Library: writers and their books by Leah Price looks good. Maureen Corrigan's pick includes Swamplandia! by Karen Russell, which sounds Hiassen-like.
- The Daily Mail: Columnists choose their favourites, including Sandra Parsons (Jeanette Winterston's memoir Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal.
- Reading Matters : this blog has four posts on other bloggers' choices as books of the year, with lots of books not appearing in other lists, including Ida Hattemer-Higgins's The History of History: a novel of Berlin.
- Shelf Unbound: Top 10 Books of 2011 include the widely-praised Leaving the Atocha Station by Ben Lerner, and Damascus by Joshua Mohr.
- Brain Pickings from Maria Popova : several lists, including 11 Best Illustrated Children's and Picture Books of 2011, including some gorgeous illustrations. Also, 11 Best Biographies and Memoirs, starting with the very successful Steve Jobs biography by Walter Isaacson.
- The Kansas City Star: Top 100 Books of 2011 including The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka.
- The Seattle Times: 22 Gift Books for Ardent Readers by Mary Ann Gwinn, including Ex Libris: the art of bookplates by Martin Hopkinson.
- St Louis Post Despatch: Favourite books of 2011 points out that several fascinating novels seemed to take place outside of cities and deep inside dark woods including Charles Frazier's Nightwoods. Lots of snappily-introduced books in this one.
- The Millions: lots of A Year in Reading articles, such as Michael Schaub on Seth Fried's promising The Great Frustration.
- Goodreads: the readers' social network has the results of a Best Books of 2011 poll, including in Non-Fiction The Geeks Shall Inherit the Earth by Alexandra Robbins and in Fiction 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami.
- Time magazine: 10 Best Fiction Books of 2011 includes Kate Atkinson's Started Early, Took My Dog - "a kind of seedy hard-boiled modern epic."
- Huffington Post: Best Books 2011.
- Slate: Books for the Discerning Stocking includes two classic thrillers, Conrad's The Secret Agent and Graham Greene's A Confidential Agent.
- Salon: over 50 writers choose their favourite books of the year, including Sebastian Barry, who went for The Emperor of Lies by Steve Sem-Sandberg, set in the Lodz ghetto, and Paula McCain, who chose Ann Patchett's State of Wonder. Also, there is Laura Miller's Best Fiction selection (Patchett gets in again), and her Non-Fiction choices, including James Gleick's The Information.
- Evening Standard (London): lots of lists, including Crime (the great Carl Hiassen's Star Island) and Older Children (Gill Lewis's Skyhawk). Also a round-up of Most Chosen Books of the Year.
- Washington Post: Jonathan Yardley's selection of Year-End Picks mentioned that nothing lived up to older fiction such as J.G. Farrell's Empire trilogy, or P.G. Wodehouse. However, he did pick Edna O'Brien's Saints and Sinners and The Cut by George Pelecanos.
- Vancouver Sun: 2011's Top 10 Books by Tracy Sherlock - again Jennifer Egan's A Visit from the Goon Squad and Patrick Dewitt's The Sisters Brothers.
- Brainpickings: lists include Best Photography Books of 2011 and 11 Best Science Books.
- London Independent: Children's Books of 2011, Book of the Year ('the one you wouldn't lend'), Susan Elkin's Teenage Books of the Year (such as Jennifer Donnelly's Revolution and Catherine Erskine's Mockingbird, based on the Virginia Tech shootings). History books in 'the year of tyrannies overturned' features the Wyatt biography also mentioned in the New Statesman list above). Also, Digital Literature recommendations include some interesting innovative apps and short 'plain-text' works.
- Seattle Times: 32 of the Year's Best Books - 21 of which are fiction, including Lost Memory of Skin by Russell Banks and Alan Hollinghurst's The Stranger's Child.
- The Economist: Page-turners from 2011, including Jason Burke's The 9/11 Wars and Janine di Giovanni's autobiography Ghosts by Daylight: a memoir of love, war and redemption.
- Newsweek/The Daily Beast: contributors and writers give their choices of favourite books of the year - including an intereresting sounding story, Deborah Baker's The Convert, and the versatile Geoff Dyer's essay collection Otherwise Known as the Human Condition.
- Irish Independent: Celia Keenan's choice of Young Adult books includes Siobhan Parkinson's Bruised and Roddy Doyle's A Greyhound of a Girl.
- John Self: The Asylum blog always provides an interesting selection - Twelve from the Shelves 2011 includes several short novels, and foreign fiction in translation like The Loft by Marlen Haushofer and Italo Calvino's Mr Palomar.
- Vanity Fair: The Best Books of 2011 You Haven't Read by Elissa Schapell looks at books which aren't getting enough attention on other lists, such as Someday This Will Be Funny by Lynn Tillmann.
- Los Angeles Times: Holiday Books sets out the lists nicely as book covers - hover over them for more. For instance, the Fiction and Poetry list. David Ulin's review of the year is here, and includes James Gleick's The Information : a history, a theory, a flood.
- The Boston Globe (limited access without subscription): Crime best books of the year include The Cut by George Pelecanos - also, poetry, fiction, non-fiction, science, chldren's books available.
- Austin Statesman: round-up by Joe Gross, with his own favourites, including Joan Didion's Blue Nights.
- School Library Journal: their excellent Best of 2011 round-up includes Apps, Graphic Novels, Technology, Fiction, Non-Fiction and more.
- Book Trust: Books of the Year by Nikesh Shukla : "Zone One by Colson Whitehead (Harvill Secker) is my favourite book of the year ... It is subtly political, it is overtly honest about humanity, it is textured and still and tense and all the parameters you want to give it. But it is also funny."
- Wall Street Journal: Twelve Months of Reading from 50 people, including Lee Child (Before I Go to Sleep by S.J. Watson) and Michael Ignatieff (Tony Judt's The Memory Chalet, also recommended by us here).
- Publishers' Weekly: Staff Picks include Hitch-22 by the late Christopher Hitchens, and The Anatomy of a Moment by Javier Cercas. The official lists are many, including all the standard categories, such as fiction.
- Library Journal: Best Books - the Top 10, including the always interesting Steven Pinker's The Better Angels of our Nature - why violence has declined, and several other lists.
- Egypt Independent: in this year of all others, it's good to get a different angle on books of the year from this publication - 11 Egyptian authors choose their favourite books of the year, one in which for obvious reasons publishing was disrupted.
- San Francisco Chronicle: 100 recommended books from 2011 in many categories, including in fiction Chris Adrian's retelling of A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Great Night. A shorter selection is the Top 10 books of the year.
- Chicago Sun-Times: selections by book reviewers from the paper. Roger K. Miller selects Ian Kershaw's final book on Hitler, The End.
- Houston Chronicle: Maggie Galehouse includes in her selection Roddy Doyle's new book of short stories, Bullfighting.
- ABC Online: Louise Maher's Top 11 Books of 2011 includes John Larkin's The Shadow Girl.
- The Poetry Foundation: their staff choose their favourite books from 2011, such as Negro League Baseball by Harmony Holiday.
- Time Magazine: Lev Grossman's Top 10 Moments in Reading in 2011, including Lars Kepler's The Hypnotist and Top 10 Fiction (doesn't go down well with many in the comments section).
- Best of Arabic Literature in English 2011: a different angle to most of the other lists.
- PBS (audio and transcript): Ron Charles of the Washington Post includes Ann Patchett's State of Wonder.
- LA Weekly writers give their selections, such as The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman.
- January Magazine: lots of lists, including two on crime fiction, such as Alan Glynn's Bloodland.
Try The Adventures of Caterwaul the Cat: Feline Pie just out in October from Boutique of Quality Books in Atlanta,GA, USA. It is a delightful fairytale novel for ages 10 to adult--complete with any army of poison dart frogs, a Parliament of Possums, and a feline mafia...not to mention itchy powder, straight out of author, Arthur Mark Boerke's childhood.
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